How do infants learn a language? Why and how do languages evolve? How do we understand a sentence? This book explores these questions using recent computational models that shed new light on issues related to language and cognition. The chapters in this collection propose original analyses of specific problems and develop computational models that have been tested and evaluated on real data. Featuring contributions from a diverse group of experts, this interdisciplinary book bridges the gap between natural language processing and cognitive sciences. It is divided into three sections, focusing respectively on models of neural and cognitive processing, data driven methods, and social issues in language evolution. This book will be useful to any researcher and advanced student interested in the analysis of the links between the brain and the language faculty.
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Product Details
Weight: 600g
Dimensions: 158 x 235mm
Publication Date: 25 Jan 2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107162228
About
Thierry Poibeau is Director of Research at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Paris and head of the LaTTiCE laboratory in Paris France. His is also an affiliated lecturer at the Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (DTAL) of the University of Cambridge. He works on natural language processing (NLP) in particular focusing on information extraction question answering semantic zoning knowledge acquisition from text and named entity tagging. Aline Villavicencio is a Reader at the Institute of Informatics Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Brazil and is a fellow of CNPq (Brazil). Her research interests in natural language processing are in computational models of acquisition of linguistic information from data distributional semantic models multiword expression and applications like text simplification and question answering.